CBN wheels: what kinds of things do/will you turn?
Many people have experience and certainly have opinions based on that experience.
Sometimes the opinion depends on the way a person works and maybe more importantly, on what they turn.
I've had a bunch of different CBN grits. What I use now is:
60 grit on bench grinder (for shaping and making new tools)
600 grit on bench grinder (for sharpening skews, bowl gouges, scrapers, NRS, parting tools)
1200 grit on a Tormek (for sharpening spindle gouges)
I mostly turn dry wood, often hard and fine grained woods, lots of exotics, plenty of spindles.
For my use the finer grit the better the finish off the tool and the less sanding required. The holly finial in this picture is off the tool with no sanding, spindle gouge sharpened on 1200 grit CBN.
The ebony finial had light sanding with fine grit paper.
If turning bowls from green wood the grit of the sharpening grit wouldn't mater much but coarser grit wastes more steel.
If turning bowls/platters from dry wood the finer sharpening wheel can make a difference UNLESS you like to sand with disks on a drill, then use any grit CBN. I don't power sand. I turn, use hand scrapers to smooth, then sand by hand.
If you know other turners in your area or club, you might try sharpening on various CBN wheels and decide what works best for you.
JKJ